5Mins Read Singer and songwriter Sia took to Fortune this week to share her thoughts on the food system, and why as a vegetarian, she’s excited about the future of the meat industry. “I’ve always loved animals, ever since I can remember,” Sia, whose full name is Sia Kate Isobelle Furler, wrote in the op-ed on Fortune. […]
3Mins Read A new report from business technology outfit CIIE.Co and the Good Food Institute (GFI) claims that cultivated meat could radically transform India’s food system. The reasoning behind the claim comes from securing a domestic food chain, reduced impact of climate change, and reliable nutrition. The report states that without significant government investment, alongside industry acceptance […]
4Mins Read China’s Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs has published its eagerly awaited national plan. Acting as a blueprint for future developments, innovations and national economic strength, the plan has specifically included cultivated meat and ‘future foods’ as sectors to actively participate in. Long-term goals as directed by China’s political leaders, are supported by the agricultural […]
3Mins Read Japanese foodtech IntegriCuture has closed a Series A funding round with £7 million successfully raised. The investment will go into the development of affordable growth mediums, plus other tech solutions for the cultivated meat sector. The company plans to make developments open source in a bid to accelerate widespread progress and commercialisation. To date, IntegriCulture […]
4Mins Read California’s cultivated meat trailblazer Upside Foods has announced its acquisition of cultivated seafood Cultured Decadence. The Wisconsin-based cultivated seafood company will bring high-impact seafood products to the Upside portfolio. Combined capabilities and technical specificity will speed production. Cultured Decadence will adopt Upside’s brand name but remain in the Midwest as a production hub. Cultured Decadence […]
4Mins Read Cultivated meat brand SuperMeat has held a blind taste testing event at its in-house Tel Aviv restaurant, The Chicken. Among the samplers was highly respected Israeli taster and Master Chef judge Michal Ansky. Highly confident in her ability to identify the real chicken, Ansky grows visibly less certain as the test progresses. She is eventually […]
Are lab-grown oysters coming to a plate near you? That’s the hope for Nikita Michelsen and marine biologist Joey Peters, the co-founders behind the cultivated oyster meat seafood startup, Pearlita Foods. For now, though, they’re starting with vegan oysters made from mushrooms and seaweed.
The Raleigh, North Carolina-based startup is working to develop cultivated oysters—Pearlita says it’s the first cultivated meat company to tackle oysters and oyster shells. The company is a funding recipient of Sustainable Food Ventures and Big Idea Ventures New Protein Fund.
The company revealed its first prototype last week, an oyster made from mushrooms and seaweed. But the plan is to integrate cell-cultured technology along with the fungi and seaweed, once there’s regulatory approval for cultivated meat products.
Pearlita is also producing a biodegradable oyster shell that requires no shucking. That’s still in development, so the company is using real oyster shells to showcase its products for now.
“Instead of harvesting and killing oysters from the sea we grow them, using cellular agriculture. Just as animals would, we are creating a mixture of nutrients to raise cells in a controlled environment free of disease or chemical contamination. By culturing cells we are providing a new untapped source of seafood, which is meant to support wild populations by reducing the impact from fishing” Peters said in a statement.
Courtesy Pearlita
The company recently secured investments from CULT Food Science.
“We are impressed by and proud of Pearlita’s successful production of its first cultivated oyster prototype. Pearlita’s commitment to making the world a better place and doing its part to increasing the world’s food security is encouraging as we possess the same goals,” Lejjy Gafour, CEO of CULT Food Science, said in a statement.
“Pearlita is taking great steps to advance the production of cultured seafood on a mass scale. We are energized by the positive contributions that their team is making to the cellular agriculture industry.”
Oysters in the ecosystem
The founders say they chose North Carolina as their headquarters because it is the second-largest estuarine system in the U.S., as well as the fastest-growing hub for biotech and future foods.
“So we will be close to the ecosystems where oysters thrive and amongst other entrepreneurs—both which we believe will accelerate our growth,” says Michelsen.
Oysters play critical roles in their ecosystems. They clean and filter the water—an adult oyster can clean as much as 50 gallons of water per day. They can filter sediment and nitrogen that can make water unsafe for other marine animals.
Overharvesting for human consumption has seen oyster populations decline in key areas around the world. According to the National Park Service, 85 percent of oyster reefs are gone. And as oceans face a growing number of threats from pollution and acidification to biodiversity loss, keeping populations for critical ecosystem-supporting species like oysters intact is crucial to the future of our oceans, experts say.
Photo by Anima Visual on Unsplash
“By using cell cultivation we are hoping to grow oysters efficiently, without adding any burden to wild populations, so that they can continue to perform their important ecosystems services – like carbon sequestration” adds Michelsen. Further, Pearlita’s oysters would have a far less toxic profile. “Oysters in polluted water ways are known to store contaminants and toxins in their tissues. Ours would be contaminant free.”
Pearlita says cultivated oysters would remove much of the burden on our oceans and marine life that wild harvesting and farming cause. The company says this would decrease the footprint from farm-raising oysters, significantly—oyster farming comes with a host of problems, including reducing nutrients from the water column, as well as competing with other organisms for survival, which can lead to environmental degradation, according to a recent report from the University of Massachusetts.
“It made so much sense to me,” Nikita Michelsen, founder and CEO of Pearlita Foods, said in a statement. “We have acidification and rising temperatures in the ocean.”
Despite the strides made in the cultivated meat space, reproducing bivalves have proven more difficult, says the Pearlita team, because the tissues are so complex. Pearlita says it’s the complexity of the tissues that makes oysters a desirable food to begin with.
“Pearlita is going to deliver something very unique,” says Stephanie Michelsen, advisor to Pearlita Foods and CEO of Jellatech. “By utilizing novel cellular agriculture, they will make one of the highest premium proteins accessible,” she says.
Cultivated seafood
Like the plant-based protein category, cultivated meat has largely been focused on beef and chicken replacements, with much success. Eat Just’s cultivated Good Meat received regulatory approval in Singapore in 2020 and began selling to consumers since. Upside Foods recently launched a factory it says can produce 400,000 pounds of cultivated meat per year, once it has U.S. regulatory approval.
While a fraction of the bigger cultivated meat market, cultivated seafood is making a splash in the cell-based industry. U.S.-based BlueNalu has been working to prepare for launches in Europe and Asia with its cultivated seafood. And Bay Area startup Wildtype says it has secured distribution deals for its cultivated salmon once it received regulatory approval. Pearlita says it plans to develop other types of sustainable seafood, including squid and scallops.
Photo: Jill Ettinger
As to when that may happen, the industry is still uncertain but hopeful. At best, it will likely be at least 12-18 more months before there’s full FDA approval. But the industry is ready. “We’re rising to this challenge,” Wildtype co-founder Justin Kolbeck, said earlier this year, “and are excited to introduce our products to the public very soon.”
Pearlita is ready, too.
“Although this is a huge challenge we plan to build a passionate team with the unique culturing expertise in this niche field to produce this novel, sustainable seafood,” Peters said. “With support from investors I have no doubt we will accomplish great things.”
3Mins Read Leading cultivated meat brand Mosa Meat has made public how it replaced the controversial growth medium, fetal bovine serum, without genetically altering cells. The findings are published in the journal Nature Food. “Today, we are excited to share that we have published a peer-reviewed article in Nature Food which reveals how we achieve muscle differentiation […]
3Mins Read South Korean startup DaNAgreen has bagged ₩8 billion (approx. US$6.7 million). The R&D company announced the news at the end of 2021. Lotte Ventures, Timewise Investment and Pathfinder H all participated in the Series A investment round. Closure brings total funding to ₩10 billion within four years. The Series A money will be used to […]
3Mins Read Israel’s Future Meat Technologies has secured the largest ever funding raise for the cultivated meat sector. Its $347 million Series B round was co-led by ADM Ventures. Participation from Menora Mivtachim, S2G ventures, and Tyson Foods, amongst others, has been announced. Funding is being cited by Future Meats as confirmation of its industry-leading status and […]
3Mins Read Leading humanitarian chef José Andrés has joined food tech startup Eat Just. He has taken up a board position for the GOOD Meat brand. Alongside his appointment, Andrés has pledged to serve cultivated chicken in one of his U.S. restaurants, pending regulatory approval. As a board member, he will offer introductions to potential farm partners […]
3Mins Read CellMEAT has announced a world first: the successful development of a cultivated Dokdo shrimp. The finished product has been replicated in a number of different sizes and shapes. The company cites this as making them suitable for a wide range of cooking applications. The shrimp have been created using CellMEAT’s recently revealed serum-free culture medium. […]
3Mins Read Ark Biotech, led by Yossi Quint, aims to address a major stumbling block in the cultivated meat arena. The company is seeking to roll out an extensive infrastructure update to allow pilot plants to be ditched in favour of facilities capable of scaled production. Ark Biotech will address both equipment and software needs. Earlier this […]
3Mins Read Israeli cultivated meat brand Future Meat is in the middle of a funding round that aims to bring in $320 million. If successful, the funding will make the company Israel’s most valuable, within its sector. Tyson Foods and ADM are anticipated to join the round, having invested in the Series B funding earlier this year. […]
3Mins Read U.S.-based Upside Foods has announced a major breakthrough. It has produced an animal component-free (ACF) cell feed designed to fast track the cultivated meat industry to scalable production. Two products have been manufactured using the feed; chicken nuggets and chicken hot dogs. Roll out is anticipated across the company’s full product range. Industry pioneer Upside […]
3Mins Read Aleph Farms and Munich-based Wacker have come together in a new open supply chain agreement. The move will see Wacker offering food-grade growth medium proteins to all cultivated meat operations. Removal of cost barriers is the intended aim, with Aleph pushing for a resulting wide rollout of cultivated product manufacture. Makers of the world’s first […]
3Mins Read CellMEAT has unveiled its fetal bovine serum (FBS)-free cell culture medium. The product will help drive down production costs and circumnavigate ethical concerns within the cultivated meat industry. The company claims that others worldwide are attempting to bring a similar concept to fruition quickly. South Korea’s CellMeat was selected as a participant in the Tech […]
3Mins Read Estonian startup Gelatex Technologies has secured €1.2 million in seed funding. The investment will be used to continue the development of plant-based polymer scaffolds. Up to 90 percent cheaper than alternatives, the scaffolding could allow cultivated meat to be rolled out and cost-effective. New premises are being constructed to increase production, ahead of predicted demand. […]
4Mins Read Meat made via harvesting cells from animals should, in the future, be referred to as “cultivated” meat according to alt-protein company Upside Foods. The comment is in response to the United States Department of Agriculture’s advance notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPR) around labeling cultured meat titled “Labeling of Meat and Poultry Products Comprised of or […]
3Mins Read Biotech startup Tiamat Sciences has announced that it is developing a new cellular agriculture growth medium. The move is intended to significantly reduce the cost of producing cultivated meat and allow for faster progression to large-scale manufacturing. Traditional growth factors are typically cost-prohibitive, but new plant-based biomolecules can take their place. Having just secured $3 […]
4Mins Read US-based UPSIDE Foods says it has completed construction on a production facility for manufacturing various types of cultivated meat and seafood. The Emeryville, California, facility, which it calls its Engineering, Production, and Innovation Center (EPIC), held a ribbon-cutting ceremony to celebrate the recent milestone. The facility is “the latest in a series of developments as […]
3Mins Read Jane Goodall is set to narrate the story of cultivated protein in the new documentary Meat The Future, which will also feature Moby’s music.
3Mins Read Food tech company Eat Just’s cultivated meat division GOOD Meat has raised US$97 million in new funding, adding to the $170 million round the company announced in May of this year and bringing GOOD’s overall round to $267 million. The new funds will go towards further research and development for GOOD’s cultivated meat products. New […]
5Mins Read Singapore has yet again earned a ‘world first’ badge in the global cultivated protein industry, this time granting Esco Aster a license to manufacture cultured animal cells meat for commercial sale. The Singapore Food Agency (SFA) gave its approval to the manufacturer in July, positioning the city-state as a firm world and regional leader in […]
3Mins Read Hong Kong-based Avant, the startup making fish proteins directly from cells, has been named one of the world’s 100 most promising Technology Pioneers for 2021. The list, selected by the World Economic Forum (WEF), identifies companies that are disrupting industries using new technologies that are set to have a positive impact on health, the environment […]
4Mins Read Orbillion Bio, the Silicon Valley food tech dedicated to culturing premium heritage meats, has joined the Alliance for Meat, Poultry & Seafood Innovation (AMPS Innovation). The coalition is made up of seven other U.S.-based members, including players like cell-cultured seafood maker BlueNalu and cultivated chicken startup Upside Foods, who are working together to educate consumers […]
4Mins Read Cell-based meat industry experts are calling on the French government to step up their efforts to tap into the opportunities to be made in the fast-growing sector, or risk missing out on the global market. Co-founder of the nonprofit Cellular Agriculture France Nathalie Rolland argues that there is a duty for the country to support […]
4Mins Read Cell-based meat industry experts are calling on the French government to step up their efforts to tap into the opportunities to be made in the fast-growing sector, or risk missing out on the global market. Co-founder of the nonprofit Cellular Agriculture France Nathalie Rolland argues that there is a duty for the country to support […]
3Mins Read Biodesign startup Geltor has unveiled PrimaColl, which the company claims is the world’s first real vegan collagen for the food and beverage industry, an exact match for the bioactive amino acid core of Type 21 collagen. Founded by Alexander Lorestani and Nick Ouzounov in 2015, the San Leandro, California-based Geltor has created a computational biology platform that […]